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Operative No. 36 reports on the Regal Hotel. I checked in at the Regal Hotel at 5:30 P. M. I secured a room on the third floor and put in most of my time in the lobby. While sitting in the lobby I saw Francis Gaddis, of Room 328, and John Garten, of Room 354, start a conversation and Garten take Miss Gaddis out to lunch, and after lunch he went with her to her room as stayed from 8:30 to 9:20 o'clock. Miss Gaddis told Mr. Garten that she was employed as a Cashier at the New England Cafeteria, South Boston, and is also taking a course in the Tulsa Business College. I find that Miss Gaddis is on a salary of $6.00 per week. She rooms with her sister at the Regal, who is Cashier at the Kansas City Waffle House on East Third Street. The Misses Gaddis have roomed with Mr. Miller, the proprietor of the Regal, for the past three years and said that every time Mr. Miller buys a new rooming house that they move with him. They first roomed with him at the Willington Hotel on West Third Street, and when Mr. Miller sold out and moved to a rooming house on South Boulder they moved with him, and from there the Misses Gaddis moved with him to the Regal Hotel. The Miss Gaddis with whom Mr. Garten was in conversation stated that she had played the owner of Pete's Bar on East Third Street; that they had fallen out and one night while she was out on a drunk with some men she arranged to call up Pete on the phone and get him out to the edge of town, and then she had those men beat him up and leave him there. I heard Miss Gaddis tell Garten that Mr. Miller knew the kind of a girl that Goldie Gordon, the girl that is becoming so prominent in the Devereaus case, was and she could not see why Mr. Miller would keep her in the house, and often wondered why he didn't check her out. She also says that a man by the name of Dickson, in Room No. 357, played a very important part in the recent Devereaus murder case. Miss Gaddis said there is at present an awful

Operative No. 36 reports on the Regal Hotel. I checked in at the Regal Hotel at 5:30 P. M. I secured a room on the third floor and put in most of my time in the lobby. While sitting in the lobby I saw Francis Gaddis, of Room 328, and John Garten, of Room 354, start a conversation and Garten take Miss Gaddis out to lunch, and after lunch he went with her to her room as stayed from 8:30 to 9:20 o'clock. Miss Gaddis told Mr. Garten that she was employed as a Cashier at the New England Cafeteria, South Boston, and is also taking a course in the Tulsa Business College. I find that Miss Gaddis is on a salary of $6.00 per week. She rooms with her sister at the Regal, who is Cashier at the Kansas City Waffle House on East Third Street. The Misses Gaddis have roomed with Mr. Miller, the proprietor of the Regal, for the past three years and said that every time Mr. Miller buys a new rooming house that they move with him. They first roomed with him at the Willington Hotel on West Third Street, and when Mr. Miller sold out and moved to a rooming house on South Boulder they moved with him, and from there the Misses Gaddis moved with him to the Regal Hotel. The Miss Gaddis with whom Mr. Garten was in conversation stated that she had played the owner of Pete's Bar on East Third Street; that they had fallen out and one night while she was out on a drunk with some men she arranged to call up Pete on the phone and get him out to the edge of town, and then she had those men beat him up and leave him there. I heard Miss Gaddis tell Garten that Mr. Miller knew the kind of a girl that Goldie Gordon, the girl that is becoming so prominent in the Devereaus case, was and she could not see why Mr. Miller would keep her in the house, and often wondered why he didn't check her out. She also says that a man by the name of Dickson, in Room No. 357, played a very important part in the recent Devereaus murder case. Miss Gaddis said there is at present an awful